"Jong Sik Yoon,
biological sciences, who retired June 1. A geneticist and evolutionary
biologist, Yoon directed the National Drosophilia Species Resources Center, the
largest facility of its kind in the world, when it was transferred to Bowling
Green from Texas in 1982. Yoon's research concerned the evolution of
chromosomes in drosophilia. He examined such topics as the effects of
pollutants on chromosome reproduction and the relationship between cell
mutation and cancer. In 1981, he hosted the first scientist from the People's
Republic of China to visit an Ohio university and the following year he traveled
to China for research and to help set up a drosophilia lab there."

Thomas
Young

The English physicist Thomas Young
(1773-1829) is best known for his double-slit interference experiment which
validated the wave theory of light and for the elastic modulus named for
him.Quaker.

"The cytogenetics laboratory is headed by Dr. Jar-Fee Yung, Ph.D.,
FACMG. Dr. Yung received her training in clinical cytogenetics at the
University of California, Berkeley. She has served as the laboratory director
at Mercy Medical Center in Chicago, Illinois, and was also the director of a
clinical cytogeneticist training program while at Mercy. She has headed a
national cytogenetics laboratory in New York City for Impath laboratory. She
then served with the Laboratory Improvement Department at CAP, College of
American Pathologists, the governing agency for accrediting all clinical
diagnostic laboratories including cytogenetics. Dr. Yung is board certified
through the American Board of Medical Genetics, and is a founding fellow of the
American College of Medical Genetics."

Author of Methodi
herbariae libri tres, (Prague, 1592). Republished in Frankfurt in 1604. In
this work Zaluzansky discussed the concept that plants have sex. However, he
did not recognize male and female sexes in plants, but held rather that plants
have a separate, mixed sex.Rad Apotekarsky (Pharmaceutical Order), 1592, resulted from Zaluzansky's work as
supervisor of pharmacy in the Old City of Prague.Cena neb vymereni vseck
lekarstvi (Prices or Standards of All
Medicine), 1596, 1604, 1659, 1699, 1737, published in Czech, German, and
French.Galenumet vicenam libri VII attacked old-fashioned superstitions in
medicine and a plea for a return to the natural way of healing. The work was
dedicated to Emperor Rudolf II.

Zaluzansky had close relations with specialists in
medicine--Adam Hubr of Ryzmpach, and Mat. Borbonius and Theodor Sixtus of
Ottersdorf--and with a prosecution lawyer, Jachym of Technice.Protestant, an Utraquist, a denomination
descended from Huss.

Zambeccari experimented on dogs, removing organs in order to
understand the function they performed in the living animal- -the spleen, for
example. Sometime after the organ was removed, he would kill the dog and
dissect it in order to attempt to observe what changes had resulted.He developed a general, iatromechanical
physiology of the nerves in "Concerning
Sleep . . .", a manuscript unpublished in his own day.

After completing his medical degree, Zambeccari lived in
Florence with Redi for a couple of years and worked with him, and to Redi he
dedicated his Experiments Concerning the
Excision of Various Organs, 1680. From letters by Redi it appears that he
was instrumental in Zambeccari's appointment in Pisa, and later of his
promotion.

He knew Guido Grandi and corresponded with him.

Paul
A. Zimmerman / Paul Albert Zimmerman

(Born 1918).A chemist and former president of Concordia Lutheran College in
Ann Arbor, Michigan.

1972-1975, Teachings Physiklaborant (BASF
AG Ludwigshafen) & specialized Abitur
1975-1981, Study mathematics and theoretical physics (University of Victories
and University of Heidelberg), Conclusion as a diploma mathematician, recess
area: Mathematical physics
1981-1983, System analysts and programmers with BBR Mannheim (reactor physics)
1983-1987, Data processing adviser for office communication with ABB Mannheim
(ABB computer science GmbH)
1987-1990, Music producer and composer, publishing house leader of a music
publishing house, managing director of the Composia GmbH, numerous publications
within the clay/tone carrier range, film music, television.
1990, Graduation at the University of Mannheim (Dr.rer.nat.) over theory of
approximation and one
numeric application to a problem from quantum mechanics
1990-1993, Lecturer to the FH Heidelberg, FB computer science (donation rehablitation)

Member: The New York Academy of Sciences,
Fellow and Member of the International Society for Complexity, Information and
Design, Awarded Member of the American Association for the Advancement
ofScience (AAAS), Member in the Professor Forum, Professional School Frankfurt
am Main University of Applied Sciences, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.

"Christianity stands and falls with the resurrection of
Jesus Christ. The Bible reports on it, but there are also extra-Biblical
historical vouchers for this event. The scholar for Roman history, Professor
Thomas Arnold, 15 years Headmaster of Rugby, author of the 3-volume standard
work History of Rome, and owners of
the chair for modern history at the Oxford university, very well familiarly in
handling proofs for the determination of historical facts, said: 'I have been
used for many years to study histories of other times, and to examine and weigh
the evidence of those who have written about them, and I know of no better and
fuller evidence of every sort, to the understanding of a fair inquirer, than
the great sign which God hath given us that Christ died and rose again from the
dead.' Meanwhile there are further historical realizations, which are to be
described in this article."

(1586-1670).Italian
optician, astronomer, mechanic, physicist, specialist in magnetism. Zucchi was a very skilled telescope-maker and
in the Dictionary of Scientific Biography, Luigi Campedelli gives credit to Zucchi
for ground-breaking contributions to the use of the reflecting telescope, antedating those of James Gregory and Sir
Isaac Newton.

Zucchi entered the Jesuit order as a novice on 28 October
1602 and spent his whole life in the order. It is of interest that from a
family of eight children, seven embraced a religious life--all three daughters
as nuns, three sons as Jesuits, and one son as a secular priest.Zucchi developed an interest in astronomy
from meeting Johannes Kepler.

About 1608, or perhaps 1616, Zucchi used a lens to observe
the image produced by a concave mirror, and thus produced a primitive
reflecting telescope, apparently the first one. Later, in Optica philosophica, 1652, he described it.Zucchi was the first one to observe the
spots on Jupiter, in 1630. He
published two works, in 1646 and 1649 on the philosophy of machines, that is,
analyses of mechanics. In one of these books there was a section on magnetism.He also wrote on the barometer, denying the
existence of a vacuum. In all, clearly a rock-ribbed conservative in natural
philosophy.

Testimony in In
Six Days: Why Fifty Scientists Choose to Believe in Creation, edited by John F. Ashton, Ph.D.Master Books, Inc., Green Forest, AR,
2001.ISBN 0-89051-341-4. "Biodiversity
is a powerful testimony about the Creator that confirms Romans 1:20: 'From the creation of the world, God's invisible
qualitites, his eternal power and divine nature have been clearly observed in
what he made.'"